Authors: Sara Craven
from me that I didn't want to give.' He closed his eyes for a
moment. 'Our quarrel was terrible—irrevocable. I still bear the
scars of his disgust —his rage.' He shook his head. 'For a moment I
thought he was going to kill me. In a way I wish he had done.
Because the ultimate penalty was much worse.
'He condemned me to a kind of living death with my guilt —my
shame. My life became a torment. I drank too much—rode too
hard —took too many risks. That's how I ended up in that chair.
'But even then Fabien never spoke to me again in his lifetime. He
made it clear that he stayed at La Tour Monchauzet because the
vines needed him —and because he was sure that one day—
somehow—Isabelle would return to him, and he had to be here—
waiting.'
He looked at Sabine, his face serious, his eyes almost pleading.
'Can you forgive me, my child? Or will you also turn your back
and walk away, condemning me to an eternity of silence?'
Sabine stared down at her hands, locked together in her lap. She
was wretchedly conscious of Rohan watching her, his brows
drawn together - in frowning concentration.
She said quietly, 'No. I can't do that. There's been altogether too
much guilt —too much pain already. I'm not prepared to inflict
additional suffering—' she glanced across at Madame de
Rochefort'—on anyone.'
'You shouldn't have come here.' The
Baronne's
voice was a sudden
wail. 'It was all right until you came.'
Her husband gave a tired sigh. 'No,
ma chere,
it has never been all
right. But now, maybe, we all get a second chance. The wounds
can begin to heal,
hein?'
He took one of Sabine's rigid hands,
gently unclenching her fingers. 'Tomorrow, I shall send for the
notaire,
and arrange to formally acknowledge you as my only
child.'
Sabine bit her lower lip until she tasted blood. 'Is that really
necessary? Couldn't we just leave things as they are —enjoy the
fact that we've found each other?' She swallowed. 'I mean—you
hardly know me. . .'
'That is something I hope to remedy.' The
Baron
smiled faintly,
and lifted her hand to his lips. 'I hope that you will stay here with
me, take your place as my daughter, my heiress.'
Rohan moved swiftly, restively, his lean body tense as a coiled
spring. There was total silence in the room. Everyone was waiting
for her to speak, to smile—to submit.
At last, she said, 'I'll visit you regularly, I promise, whenever I can
get away. But I can't stay here. I have a life —a career in England,
and I have to get back to it. I think you should stick to your
original plan when you dispose of your property.' She looked
swiftly and expressionlessly at Antoinette, who glared back at her.
'I came here for some answers. Nothing else.'
Rohan said, 'It's not as simple as that, Sabine.'
She shrugged. 'That's unfortunate. Because I don't want La Tour
Monchauzet. There are too many connotations—too many strings
attached to it.' She gave a small, brittle laugh. 'Besides, I don't
really see myself as a
vigneronne.'
'You could learn.' Rohan's voice was harsh suddenly.
She didn't look at him. 'I think I've had enough lessons for a while.
I need the life I know, the life that I've made, and that belongs to
me.'
There was a tap at the door and Jacques came in. 'The doctor is
here for Madame de Rochefort.' His voice and manner was
subdued.
'Of course. Ernestine—Antoinette, will you help my wife to her
room, if you please?'
The
Baronne
dragged herself to her feet. 'It was for you, Gaston,'
she said tonelessly. 'All of it was for you.'
'I understand,
ma chere.
We will talk tomorrow — when you have
rested a little.' He sounded kind, but remote.
Don't withdraw from her, Sabine wanted to cry out. She needs you.
Don't shut her out and turn to me, as you did with Isabelle. All she
said quietly was, 'I think I'll go back to Les Hiboux now.'
'Your place is here,' her father protested.
She forced a smile. 'At the moment, I don't really feel that I have a
place anywhere. I need to be alone for a while —to think. I still
can't really believe everything that's happened.'
'But you will come back tomorrow.' He was clinging to her hand,
and she gently disengaged herself.
'Yes,' she said. She could guarantee that, if nothing else.
She waited until the
Baronne's
sad little procession had left, then
started for the door. Behind her, she heard Rohan say something
low-voiced and fierce to her father, and then his footsteps
following her.
Her throat closed up in misery and panic. As the door of the
salon
shut behind them, she turned on him,
'I thought I said I wanted to be alone.'
'I did not realise,' he said slowly, 'that I was involved in that total
exclusion.' He shrugged. 'But it doesn't matter. Tomorrow, life
begins again. No more shadows —no more secrets.' He smiled at
her, and his hands came down on her shoulders to draw her
towards him. 'Tomorrow,' he promised softly, 'I will show you my
world —our world that is to be.' His smile widened into a grin.
'Perhaps I can persuade you that the life of a
vigneronne
has much
to recommend it after all.'
'No.' She recoiled from the beguiling warmth of his hands, his
eyes. How sure he was of himself, she thought bitterly. How sure
of her, too. 'It's not going to happen.'
The smile faded, and was replaced by a frown. 'I don't think I
understand.'
She squared her shoulders. 'I don't belong here. I'm an intruder —
an interloper. I don't want La Tour Monchauzet, or any part of it.
Let Antoinette have it, just as everyone always planned.' She
paused. 'And you can have Antoinette.'
There was another long silence. He stared at her. 'You don't mean
that,' he said slowly, at last.
'Oh, but I do,' she said fiercely. 'My—father doesn't have to
acknowledge me. After all, up to a few hours ago, he never knew
of my existence.'
'But all that has changed now. . .'
'No.' Sabine shook her head fiercely. 'I —I won't desert him. I've
given my word on that. I'll write —and I'll visit him regularly, but
I'm going home to England —to stay. To get on with my life. My
real life.'
'And what about our life?' he asked harshly. 'Our plans?'
She looked down at the door. 'They —never really existed. I let
myself get caught up in a legend —a fairytale. Everyone's entitled
to one wild escapade —one romantic fling in their life, surely.'
'Is that all it was to you?' His voice was expressionless.
'Yes, of course.' She forced a bright smile. 'Oh, it was wonderful
—at the time. You're incredibly attractive, as I'm sure you know.
You'll be a—very hard act to follow.'
'Thank you.' His voice was a sliver of ice, a whiplash across her
quivering senses.
She swallowed. 'But sooner or later one has to come back down to
earth,' she went on. 'Wake up from the dream, and return to reality.
Once I've left, everything will settle down again very quickly.' She
shrugged. 'After all—life goes on. And I've done enough damage
here already.'
'Well, we can agree on something at least,' he said grimly. 'What
do you want me to do, Sabine? Go on my knees? Beg you to stay?'
'No.' Panic closed her throat. This was the worst kind of torture,
she thought achingly. She was hungry—starving for him. He was
standing so close to her that she was aware of the warm scent of
his skin. One step, and she could be in his arms, where she craved
to be.
But that would be to deny all reason — all common sense. She had
allowed herself to be deceived—carried away by his physical
allure already. For her own peace of mind—her emotional
sanity—she couldn't let it happen again. Because it was her
potential inheritance he wanted, not her, and she had to remember
that, however much it hurt.
She said huskily, 'Please don't make things more difficult than they
already are, Rohan. It was —good while it lasted, but it was all too
much, too soon, and now it's over.'
She paused, almost desperately. How gullible she'd been. How
naive, to think that Rohan could fall in love with her.
'It was just a dream.' Her voice cracked. 'Because things like this
just —don't happen. Not to people like me, anyway. . .' Her voice
died away into an endless silence.
He did not even move. When eventually he spoke, his voice was
flat.
'No,' he said. 'You are right. They—just don't happen.'
He took her hand, raised it briefly and searingly to his lips, then
walked away.
SABINE parked the car outside the chateau's main entrance, and
took a deep breath. This was the moment she'd frankly been
dreading.
But I've come this far, she thought. I might as well make it the
whole way.
She took a deep breath, then walked reluctantly to the massive
door and rang the bell. It was answered promptly by an unsmiling
Ernestine. Sabine was surprised to see her. She'd imagined the
woman would have wanted to accompany Heloise de Rochefort to
the private and expensive clinic in Switzerland where she was
having treatment for her nerves.
In the circumstances, I can't expect a warm welcome, Sabine
thought wryly, as Ernestine silently accepted her light wrap, then
conducted her to the
salon
where Gaston de Rochefort was
waiting.
'So you came after all.' He rose from his chair and embraced her
warmly. 'I was afraid you wouldn't.'
'I had second thoughts,' she admitted candidly, her answering
smile a little pinched. 'But I promised Marie-Christine I'd be here
for her wedding. Besides. . .' She hesitated.
'Besides, you promised to lend them your house for their wedding
night,' he completed blandly, and laughed at her frank
astonishment.
'How did you guess? It's supposed to be a deadly secret.'
'No one will find out from me. I think young couples should enjoy
their privacy uninterrupted by cauldrons of soup.' He offered her
the chair opposite his own, and looked at her critically. 'You have
lost weight.'
'Have I?' she prevaricated. But she knew he was right. It showed in
her face, in the starkness of her cheekbones and the deeply
shadowed eyes.
'What have you been doing?' He sounded concerned.
'Working,' she said. She'd been glad to find so much work waiting
for her when she arrived back in England. It had always proved a
solace for past unhappiness, but this time its charm hadn't worked.
She'd thrown herself into it with gritted teeth, recklessly taking on
more than she could handle. Anything—anything to stop herself
thinking.
'And thinking,' she added.
The
Baron's
brows drew together, but he didn't jump to the
immediate conclusion she'd feared.
'You must not blame yourself,' he said. 'It was right for the truth to
come out. We all treated your mother very badly. It is time amends
were made.'
'In spite of the cost?' she asked wryly. She'd been shocked when
she'd heard Heloise was receiving treatment, even though Gaston's
letters had been positive and optimistic on the subject.
Her father nodded slowly. 'In spite of that.' He paused, then lifted
himself out of his chair again. His doctors were amazed at the
speed of his progress, but he still found some movements awkward
on occasion. 'May I offer you an aperitif?'
Sabine requested a
pineau de Charentes,
then sat back in her own
chair, trying to relax, but it was impossible. Her senses were too
finely tuned, listening, waiting for another footstep, a voice, a
breath of male cologne in the air.
The thought of having to face Rohan again had nearly kept her in
England. Seeing him at the wedding was something she could
bear. There'd be so many other people around that she'd be
cushioned to some degree from the effect of his presence, she had
reasoned. She could hide in a crowd. But an intimate dinner at the
chateau was another matter altogether— because this would be the
first time she'd as much as set eyes on him since he'd walked away
from her outside this very room on that awful night.
She'd left for England two days later, having spent most of the